I normally wouldn't show you two beef recipes in a row, but I was meant to show you this last week and am only now just getting around to it. We don't eat beef very often and we would only ever very rarely have it two days in a row!
It's such a simple roast to cook, and perfect for the cheaper, less tender kind of roasts such as chuck, or blade, rump or brisket.
It has a fabulous gravy also. Perfect for spooning over the cooked meat and plenty of hot mash.
Tune in tomorrow to see what deliciousness I created with the leftovers!
One thing we really enjoy eating in the summer months are great grilled steaks. There is nothing nicer than a steak cooked properly and served up with something scrumptious on the side. Today I cooked our favourite Creamy Garlic Mushrooms to have with some simple grilled steaks that I had grilled on our electric grill. They went down a real treat!
One of my favourite late spring/early summer fruits is cherries. When we lived down in Kent at this time of year you could find lots of cherry sellers set up on the many laybys in the area, their tables just laden with glorious cherries, of several different varieties.
We had the Missionary Sisters over for supper last Thursday evening. As we all had a meeting that we needed to dash out to afterwards, I decided to keep it simple.
And they loved them. Plain old burgers, done on the grill . . . in toasted cheese rolls with their choice of garnishes . . .
I also had a bowl of potato chips for them. Thank goodness those are gone.
A tossed salad because, you need to get some vegetables in somewhere, and girls always like salad . . . unlike the guys.
And then this basic old fashioned macaroni salad. No pretense here.
Oh, it is a cold and rainy day . . . blustery . . . the kind of day that would have Pooh scrambling around with his umbrella, complaining to Piglet . . . I can almost hear his voice.
Whatever happened to spring . . . here we are in June and it still feels like April. Nevermind . . . the warm sunny days will be with us soon enough and then we will be complaining it is too hot!!
What can I say . . . there are times in life when I just long for . . . indeed crave . . . a bowl of pasta. And sometimes it can be as simple as a bowl of hot spaghetti adorned with nothing but butter, salt, pepper and a bit of parmesan and sometimes it can be something a bit more complicated . . . it just depends on my mood and how quickly I want it on the table.
When I was growing up my mother never bought mayonnaise as such. I don't know why, only that she didn't. There were only type such things that she did buy. One was Miracle Whip and the other was Salad Dressing. Both were very mayonnaise like, but couldn't be considered mayonnaise per se because they contained ingredients which were not considered proper in a mayonnaise. A proper mayonnaise should only contain egg yolks, mustard, some vinegar and oil and perhaps some seasoning.
One of the things I love most over here are Cream Teas, and of course when you think of a cream tea you must think of a scone. That delicious light bun thing that closely resembles the baking powder biscuits (not to be confused with a cookie) from back home in appearance, but is nothing like them at all in taste or texture.
I had my first cream tea when my husband and I were on holiday down in Devon. They brought the tea to our table in a lovely porcelain pot on a tray along with some dainty china cups and a plate full of lovely light scones, and bowls of red berry preserves and lucious clotted cream. I was hooked from first bite. I had never tasted anything so lovely in my life. (You don't have to have regular tea. You can get herbal blends also, which is nice. We don't drink regular tea.)
We've been having some really nice this week with not a lot of rain . . . it's looked threatening of rain at times and felt very close, but it's been quite dry for the most part. Todd soaks it all up. He loves this kind of weather!
This week it's been time to lighten things up a bit. You don't want heavy food when the temps are high.
If you had told me when I was a child that I would one day love blueberries, I would not have believed you. Nova Scotia, Canada, the place where I grew up, has some of the nicest wild blueberries in the world, just ripe and free for the picking. You can stop just about anywhere at the side of the road and find them just waiting to be picked.
One of the many perks of being a food blogger is that I occasionally get sent cookery books to review. I love it when that happens as I really love cookbooks. I was recently sent the book, Kids Cook French, by Claudine Pepin, with illustrations by Jacques Pepin to review. This one is a delight!
I grew up in Canada watching Jacques Pepin cook on PBS along with Julia Child, and so I was excited to get this book, which has been written by his daughter Claudine. It only seems natural that Claudine (an accomplished home cook and wine educator who married a chef), should publish a cookbook for kids, since she grew up with the fine cuisine of her father and now cooks most nights for her own family.
This book was designed for the foodie chile and in a way which is sure to inspire children to want to get in the kitchen and cook and we all know that a way to get children to eat healthier and to eat a more varied diet is to get them in the kitchen cooking. Kids LOVE to cook what they eat!
As a keen artist myself, and a writer of my own small illustrated cookbooklets, I really enjoyed the illustrations done by Jacques Pepin himself. They are bright and colourful and quite entertaining. The recipes range from uncomplicated to somewhat complicated, with recipes for everything from croque monsieur to roasted cauliflower to apple tarts with almond frangipane.
There is a note to each the child and the parent to begin with, followed by four chapters . . . To Start (appetizers and beginnings), To Continue (main courses), On the Side (delicious side dishes) and To Finish (as you would expect some tasty desserts). Also included are a range of tasty menus using the recipes from the book.
Everything is in both English and French, which may even inspire your children to learn a second language. I find it quite charming . . .
There are also little tips interspersed throughout in colourful little boxes . . . ie. "Everything you cut, dice, slice, or chop is going to be eaten by someone, so take care and do it well."
True to Claudine’s guiding philosophy . . . that there is no such thing as “kids food,” only “good food” . . . Kids Cook French doesn’t look or read like a children’s cookbook. You won’t find rebus-like directions in large print with little measuring spoons, or yet another “recipe” for peanut butter and jelly sandwiches. This is not to say that the recipes are overly complicated, only that adult supervision is required for what are clearly family projects.
I love the idea of families cooking together.
And once again, the illustrations truly are delightful.
I always like to try at least one recipe to show you from the cookbooks I review and so this time I chose Gougeres. Gougeres are a delicious cheese puff type of appetizer, which is composed of choux paste, which can be somewhat complicated to cook. The instructions were quite easy to follow however and I think you will agree that my Gougeres turned out just lovely!
If you haven't already gotten a gift for the special Father in your life for Father's Day on Sunday, I think this would be a fabulous gift. Nothing like getting Dad and the children into the kitchen for a little bit of family bonding over some cookery and good food!
All in all I think this is a purely delightful book, for parent and child alike. It's just complicated enough to make it interesting to the older child and adult, but not so complicated that it can't be understood by a younger child with supervision!
Kids Cook French
Les Enfants Cuisinent a La Francaise
by Claudine Pepin
with illustrations by Jacques Pepin
Cookbook for ages 5+, 96 pp.
ISBN 978-1-59253-953-6
Published by Quarry Books
RRP - $21.99 US/ £12.99 UK/ $23.99 CAN
I am truly a salad nut. I could eat salad seven nights a week and never tire of it . . . ever.
One of my favourite salad leaves to use, are the baby gems. I love them sliced into quarters and dressed with a simple vinaigrette, or a tasty blue cheese dressing . . . fabulous along with a scattering of sliced spring onion.
I don't know about you, but at my age, and with only two people living in this house, I struggle sometimes getting everything I bake eaten up. I do give a lot of it away, but food is money and in today's economy, I don't always want to be giving away half of everything I make because I can't use it or because it can't be frozen or stored. The perfect solution is to downsize recipes, cutting them in half, or only cooking and baking things that can be frozen.
We were cleaning out the freezer at the weekend and I found a nice piece of salt beef that was in danger of having been in there for far too long, so what's a gal to do. I thawed it out and cooked it. I know it's not St Patrick's Day or even close to it . . . but in all honesty I can eat salt or corned beef anytime! And of course the tastiest go with it side dish has to be cabbage!
My husband is a died and true Meat and Potatoes man. He's not bothered with having anything fancy. Simply prepared, meat and potatoes . . . he's a happy camper. It comes from having been brought up during WW2, during rationing, etc. He's happy with most things you put in front of him, but simple food pleases him most of all.
I can still remember the very first time I had a Cantuccini, or Biscotti as they are also known. I was probably in my early 30's. My ex and I were enjoying a weekend on our own at my ex Sister in Law's condo in Toronto . . . down on Young Street . . . in the midst of what was happening in Toronto.
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Always the foodie . . . I remember seeing a glass jar on the counter filled with these long, crisp biscuits and I so wanted to taste one. They were very expensive as I recall . . . so it was a real treat when my husband bought one for me.
When my ex boss and her husband went on their yearly trips to Rome . . . they always brought back Italian Cantuccini and Amaretti, Torcetti and Baci . . . I do confess, I would sneak one just so that I could savour an Italian treat.
I have a whole Board on Pinterest dedicated to Biscotti! Biscotti and Cantuccini are pretty much the same thing. Biscotti (Twice Cooked in English) Cantuccini (Coffee Bread in English)
I found this recipe on a German Food Blog called Lykkelig. Her photograph was very beguiling . . . and I loved the combination of spices used in the dough . . . warm baking spices . . . cinnamon, cardamom, nutmeg, ginger, cloves . . .
It was a bit of a risk using a recipe from a foreign language, but the pictures on the blog looked okay.
Not to mention they smelled just like what I would imagine Heaven to smell like while they were baking!
Can you take yet another delicious blueberry recipe from me??? Oh, I am sure you can! As you know I love blueberries and I am betting that there is a fair number of you who feel the same. Can you ever have too many blueberry recipes??? I think not!
There is nothing more appealing than a delicious plate of English fish and chips. This is not considred to be the National favourite dish for nothing. We love, LOVE our fish and chips here in the UK!
As good as the ones taste that you can get at the seaside and at our fish and chips place that we like in Chester . . . nothing beats the Beer Battered Cod and Twice Fried Chips that you can make at home.
A bit of a fiddle yes . . . but as a once in a blue moon treat, well worth the bother!
That crisp batter is so light and crispy and those chips . . . sigh . . . a tiny taste of heaven. I like to keep the skin on my potatoes for even extra flavour and texture, but you can certainly peel it all off.
It's your choice. I like to have ketchup and Tartar Sauce and a wedge of lemon with mine.
I make my own tartar sauce. You must give it a go. It tastes so much better than any ready made sauce! Once you have made your own from scratch tartar sauce you will never go back to ready made!
You might think of Fish and Chips as being quintessentially British, and you would not be far wrong. The history of fish and chips might surprise you however.
Interestingly this favourite British dish dates back to the seventeenth century when Jewish immigrants from Spain and Portugal peddled battered fish cooked in huge cauldrons of hot oil as a street snack!
Originally the batter was supposed to just be a vessel to cook the fish in, meant to be discarded when i came to eating it. As if! The batter, done properly, is one of the best bits!
You cannot beat hot crisp batter, encasing a delicate sweet perfectly cooked piece of fresh fish. Its pure heaven on a plate to me!
Fish has always been plentiful in the coastal areas of these beautiful Islands, and with the advent of trains in the mid nineteenth century, the North Sea profided plenty of delicious fish which could be easily transported to the inland city markets.
Tasty and nutritious battered fish provided a delicious relief from the monotony of the diets of many city folks.
It wasn't long before demand ushered in the advent of new shops all over the UK, offering crisp battered fish . . . adding chips to the menu as well, making for a tasty and substantial supper.
Wrapped together in newspaper also helped to keep the costs down. To this day you will find Fish and Chip shops all over the UK providing this delicious dish to appreciative customers.
Although with the shortage of sustainable fresh Cod and the expense, other type of fish are gaining in popularity. I do hope you will give this version a go at home.
It is a bit of trouble, but more than worth the effort taken for a once in a blue moon treat. This batter is beautifully crisp and flavourful and the fish itself, perfectly cooked and succulent. Those chips . . . don't get me started!
*Beer Battered Cod with Tartar Sauce*
Serves 4
Printable Recipe
This
is my homemade version of battered fish. With it's crisp and flavourful beer batter, you are in for a real treat if you
try this!
TARTAR SAUCE:
1 stalk celery, finely chopped
2 TBS finely chopped cornichons
1 TBS prepared horseradish
2 TBS coarsely chopped flat leaf parsley
½ tsp dry mustard
6 TBS good quality mayonnaise
1 tsp lemon juice
Salt and freshly ground black pepper to taste
FISH:
Oil for frying
1 cup flour
1 egg, beaten
1 cup beer (I use the non-alcohol version)
2 pounds of fish fillets (Cod, Haddock or Hake)(cut into 1 ½ by 3 inch pieces)
Mix all the ingredients for the tartar sauce in a bowl until well combined and set aside.
Heat the oven to 200*C/400*F. Cover a cookie sheet with paper towels and top with a wire rack.
Heat about 3" of oil to approximately 180*C/365*F in a medium sized pot.
Meanwhile,
mix flour with 1/2 teaspoon salt. Whisk in egg. Slowly add the beer
while whisking. Dip fish pieces in the batter and place on plate or the
wire rack you will be using to drain the fried fish. I usually double
dip in the batter if I have some left over once the batter dries on the
awaiting fish.
Place fish pieces, two at a time in the oil. Cook
until the fish is done and the crust is lightly golden, about 4 minutes
for 3/4-inch thick fillets. Remove fish with tongs and put on rack to
drain. Sprinkle salt over the hot fish and put on the baking sheet in
the oven to keep warm. Repeat in batches with the remaining fish. Serve
with the tartar sauce and homemade chips.
a frying thermometer
When you are ready to fry
your chips heat your fat to 120*C/250*F. Add the chips in batches,
without crowding the pan. Blanch in the fat for 5 minutes, just until
cooked through. Remove, pat dry and drain on paper toweling. Once you
have blanched all the chips raise the temperature of the fat to
160*C/320*F. Fry the chips again until crisp and golden brown. Drain
well, season with some salt and serve immediately.
Note: I sometimes will make my own oven
chips to go with this, rather than frying chips. I just take some baking potatoes, washing and
cutting them into thick wedges. I toss the wedges with some olive oil
and salt and pepper and roast them in a very hot oven for about 30
minutes until they are crispy and browned all over. You can keep them
warm while you are frying the fish.
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